How can we ensure that our digital heritage is exploited by new sectors and industries? Antonella Fresa, Promoter s.r.l. Europeana Space Technical Coordinator Derry, 12 October 2016 Upcycle Digital Heritage The Discovery Programme CARARE / FABLAB Derry
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Antonella Fresa, Promoter s.r.l. Europeana Space Technical … · 2018-12-20 · E-Space Objectives: • To provide best practices for use and re-use of digital cultural content by
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How can we ensure that our digital heritage is exploitedby new sectors and industries?
Antonella Fresa, Promoter s.r.l.
Europeana Space Technical Coordinator
Derry, 12 October 2016
Upcycle Digital HeritageThe Discovery Programme
CARARE / FABLAB Derry
The growing amount of digitizedcultural heritage raises questions on the reuse of such resources and the impact they have in engaging with citizens, education sector, creative industry, academic research.
Joining digital technologies and citizen engagement will contribute to leverage on cultural heritage to foster cultural and societal progress.
Digital Cultural Heritage and citizen participation
How can policy support the contextof change faced by ourcontemporary society?
What do cultural institutions need to keep the pace with such changes?
What is the role of citizens whenengaging with DCH and research?
Which business models alloweffective exploitation of digitalcultural heritage by creative industry?
What are the key requirements for digital cultural heritage to be actuallyre-usable (e.g. IPR, standards, searchability, richness of the metadata, high-resolution of content)
Understanding the context of change and the impact
EUROPEANAPHOTOGRAPHY (now PHOTOCONSORTIUM international association) focused on two important aspects at the basis of digital cultural heritage reuse: high quality digitisation and IPR.
EUROPEANA SPACE experimented creative re-use of digital cultural content in various sectors with pilots, hackathons and incubation processes.
RICHES investigated about the wide context of change that the cultural sector is facing, with a particular attention to recommend policies, which can accompany cultural heritage institutions to face the big societal transformation we are living today.
CIVIC EPISTEMOLOGIES explored how citizens can participate and engage with the digital transformation of cultural heritage.
Four complementary approaches
How digitization can drive to citizen engagement:EUROPEANAPHOTOGRAPHY and PHOTOCONSORTIUM
Upcycle Digital HeritageThe Discovery Programme
CARARE / FABLAB Derry
Manchester, 14 October 2015
EuropeanaPhotography at a glance
Building on EuropeanaPhotography experience
PHOTOCONSORTIUM builds upon the legacy of Europeana Photography (2012-2015) including expertise, network, know-how and tools that were produced in the context of this project.
Boris III of Bulgaria and Giovanna of Italy –the celebration of the royal wedding in Sofia.
EuropeanaPhotography established an expert hub on:
• high quality digitization of photographic content
• aggregation of digital content (to Europeana and other portals)
• metadata standards, indexing, cataloguing
• best practices for the management of digital archives
• expertise and advocacy on IPR issues and promotion of the use of open licenses for heritage photography
Such legacy is now at the core of PHOTOCONSORTIUM.
Photography engages people
High quality digital images and open licenses (where possible) are drivers for photographic content reuse and citizens engagement:
• All Our Yesterdays travelling exhibition and catalogue
• Laboratories for schools and children, for elderly people
• European Night of the Museums, Pisa (2014)
• World’s Photo of the year, Copenhagen (2015)
• Collection and digitization days that fed other, more local, exhibitions
• Heritage Photobingo project in senior homes
All Our Yesterdays
All Our Yesterdays exhibition was compiled from over 100 early photography images from partners’ collections, devised as a showcase of their masterpieces.
People’s everyday life, joys and sorrows, stories and dreams as witnessed by the first photographers (1839-1939).
In Pisa (Spring 2014), about1,000 family album photoswere collected from visitors, digitized, re-used for anotherlocal exhibition few monthslater, and eventually sent to Europeana
During the European Night of the Museums 2014, the exhibition attracted over 800 visitors in a single day
The exhibition in Pisa wasvisited by more than 5,400 in 2 months.
Guided visits and laboratories for children
<< The local exhibition in Pisa «Ricordi dai nostri album di Famiglia»
Collection day at«Photographic Memories
Workshop» in Leuven>>
The Heritage Photo Bingo experiment in Leuven senior homes
Network and Members
PHOTOCONSORTIUM is a non-profit association with democratic structure, political independence and unlimited duration. Joining PHOTOCONSORTIUM equals joining a network of top class partners from the field of (historical) photography, and gaining access to specialized services.
PHOTOCONSORTIUM is currently partner of Europeana DSI2 project and within this framework is curating the realization of the Photography Thematic Collection in Europeana.
Gaston Paris | location unknown (France), 1935 Young women at a fun fair.
Fostering business out of digital cultural heritage:the E-SPACE project
Upcycle Digital HeritageThe Discovery Programme
CARARE / FABLAB Derry
Unlocking Europe’s rich digital cultural heritage
E-Space Objectives:
• To provide best practices for use and re-use of digital cultural content by creative industries, with a special focus on the use of Europeana.
• To create new opportunities for employment and economic growth in the creative industries: jobs, money, growth.
• The work revolves around 6 Pilots that focus on different areas of the creative and cultural industries: museums, dance, games, open and hybrid publishing, photography, interactive TV.
Europeana Space: a virtuous circle
Digital cultural content
Access, unlock, reuse, IPR
Creative tools/prototypes
Innovate: incubate: testing
marketability
Private-Public Partnerships:
economic rewards: new
cultural content
• Prototyping: new prototype applications arising from the Pilots
• Open access: the IPR consultancy tool kit
• Technical platform: to browse content from all over the world, create collections, and deliver digital exhibitions
• Working with users: testing, evaluation, refining, awareness
• Hackathons: encouraging interaction with creative minds
• Business Development workshops: from the project idea to exploitation planning
Understanding the context of change and supportingpolicies for cultural heritage institutions:
the RICHES project
Upcycle Digital HeritageThe Discovery Programme
CARARE / FABLAB Derry
1. How can CH institutions renew and redefine their place in the society?
2. How can EU citizens play a co-creative role in their CH?
3. How can new technologies promote and make accessible CH?
4. How can CH become closer to its audiences?
5. How can CH be a force in the new EU economy?
QUESTIONS ADDRESSES
Policy recommendations:
• Connect communities, create cohesion by stressing (cultural) similarities, foster cultural exchange, re-invent traditional cultural expressions, food, festivals
• Exploit innovative digital tools, to promote cultural pluralism, to engage with and experience CH, to unite the past and the present, to give access to living heritage especially for younger generations
EUROPEAN IDENTITY, BELONGING AND THE ROLE OF DIGITAL CH
CO-CREATION
New approaches emerge while involving end-users and professionals, to enable a collective imagining, building and experiencing new futures.
• Dance and performance artists create new artefacts and events, develop new skills together with traditional skills
• Cultural expressions from the past are preserved, reinvigorated, renewed and transmitted to society more effectively
• Multidisciplinary collaboration between engineers, artists and cultural managers enables enhanced access to CH
VIRTUAL PERFORMANCEDIGITAL ARCHIVES
ONLINE ACCESS TO CH
The Resources Website represents the legacy of the project: a library of documents, scientific papers, policy briefs, think papershttp://resources.riches-project.eu/
RICHES RESOURCES & NETWORKING SESSIONS
Discussion and exchange of experiences on CH research, among CH institutions, academies and EU-funded projects continues in periodical Networking Sessions.Next one: Berlin, 22 November 2016, hosted by E-Space conferencehttp://berlinconference2016.europeana-space.eu
Citizen researchers: the Roadmap developed by CIVIC EPISTEMOLOGIES project
Upcycle Digital HeritageThe Discovery Programme
CARARE / FABLAB Derry
RATIONALE OF THE PROJECT
A potential not yet exploited:
Citizen science in digital culture, including crowdsourcing as a specific area of work can contribute dynamisms, to unlock the potential represented by the digitised CH
However, citizens risk to often remain disconnected from digital culture research, because of a range of different problems, mainly:
Lack of connectivity
Limits imposed by IPR
Mentality of the curators
ROADMAP FOR CITIZEN RESEARCHERS IN THE AGE OF DIGITAL CULTURE
CIVIC EPISTEMOLOGIES developed a Roadmap to prioritize a set of steps to bring citizens, their associations, and interest groups, into the research processes of digital cultural heritage
The Roadmap provides indications to cultural institutions which are willing to collaborate with citizens
Pilot and Case Studies of CIVIC EPISTEMOLOGIES explored new creative approaches for the citizens’ engagement with cultural heritage
Cooperation and synergies were established with other citizen science initiatives
The Roadmap for Citizen Science in the ageof digital culture is downloadable at
http://www.civic-epistemologies.eu/roadmap/
Registry of Resources: tools, workflows, approaches, solutions, demonstrators, and applications useful for supporting the involvement of citizens in the scientific development process
Interactive online platform for cooperation and information in the field of digital technologies applied to cultural heritage and the arts
Portal to a rich amount of resources: articles, videos, pictures, and news with links to in-depth information
Instrument for online dissemination of project
activities, providing access to services, surveys, online
consultation
www.digitalmeetsculture.net
For the discussion
1. Digitisation, rights and new business models for content providersQuality of digitisation and rights clearing are two key factors for the actual re-usability of digital content by creative industries. However, they are not well satisfying in the current availability of digital cultural resources.Content owners are often hesitating to offer open access to their high-resolution content remaining locked into old business models.Which is your vision to overcome this kind of deadlock?
2. Cooperation between research, private and public sectorsLiaison and interoperation between research, business and public sectors represent important premises to produce innovation processes.Innovation is a complex process which needs supporting policies. However, policy makers are not always able to cope with the pace of changing in the society.In which way do you think that research and entrepreneurship should interface public sector and policy makers? Who should sustain the costs of the transformation in the public sector?